1 / 12

Introducing InfantSEE ®

Introducing InfantSEE ®. A Public Health Program for America’s Youngest Patients. One-time no-cost public health program provides eye care for infants for babies 6-12 months of age complements pediatrician well-baby vision screenings no cost regardless of income. Vision is Learned.

monita
Download Presentation

Introducing InfantSEE ®

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introducing InfantSEE® A Public Health Program for America’s Youngest Patients

  2. One-time no-cost public health program provides eye care for infants • for babies 6-12 months of age • complements pediatrician well-baby vision screenings • no cost regardless of income

  3. Vision is Learned • Most critical stages of vision development occur in the first year of life. • Undetected vision problems can lead to permanent vision impairment.

  4. Need for InfantSEE® • Potential for childhood vision problems is significant, yet manageable (when caught early) • 1 in 30 will develop amblyopia • 1 in 25 will develop strabismus • 1 in 33 will show significant refractive error • Eye Diseases will be evident in 1 in 100 • Retinoblastoma – rare but possible (1 in 20,000)

  5. Need for InfantSEE® • Vision development is an important part of child development • Early child development is critical early in life: • 1st year - 50% of what we need to know for life is learned. • 2nd year- another 25% is learned • 3rd year and beyond- only 25% of life’s survival skills are added.

  6. Infant Eye Care Background • Pediatric clinical care guidelines recommend a basic eye screening as part of a well-baby health exam. • Red pupil reflex and eye alignment • Studies show physicians do not consistently conduct pediatric vision screening during clinical visit. • Only 14% of all children have had an eye exam prior to entering school.

  7. Child Eye Care Background • Of 3-5 year olds seen by pediatricians, only 66% received a vision screening. • Screening was not attempted on more than 60% of three-year-olds. • Of children who failed a screening, 50% of the parents were unaware of the fact 2 months later.

  8. Screenings vs. Examinations • Comprehensive eye exams and vision screening programs should not be confused. • Each has different purpose, generates different results • Examinations are necessary even if screenings are done periodically

  9. AOA Recommendations for Exam Frequency An initial comprehensive eye and vision examination should take place: • Between the ages of 6-12 months • Again at age three • Before a child starts school, and • Every two years thereafter.

  10. InfantSEE® Assessment What will take place during the assessment?

  11. InfantSEE® Assessment • Parental involvement is important in every facet of child’s life—including in learning to see. • InfantSEE® helps infants develop full vision potential with eye and vision assessments and patient education. • Over 7300 AOA members volunteer as InfantSEE® providers, representing all 50 states and D.C.

  12. GOOD VISION...it all begins with the infant!

More Related